Originally posted by Suzi
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No announcement yet.
His so-called Diary
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Last edited by Vanillaman; 03-30-2010, 06:16 PM.
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Source: The above information in fact comes from the US paperback edition of Patricia Cornwell’s book – the one with ‘Now Updated with New Material’ on the jacket, in which Patricia wrote on pg. 173: ‘Almost impossible to dismiss are discoveries Bower made after the initial publication of this book. Dr. Anna Gruetzner Robbins discovered a small number of Sickert letters at a Getty Research Institute in Santa Monica, California, and I went to see them. I made measurements of the stationery, described watermarks and the paper and sent the information to Bower. He was excitd enough about what he saw to travel from London to the Getty Institute and examine the original letters. His amazing discovery is this: Three Sickert letters written on his mother’s stationery and two Ripper letters come from a batch of twenty-four sheets of stationery with the watermark Gurney Ivory Laid.’
I think we were all awaiting an up date of Miss Cornwell's book? By my estimate it should have arrived last year. Yet its been very quiet. Very quiet indeed?
Pirate
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Originally posted by Vanillaman View PostOn the subject of handwriting, there was a recent analysis of one of the ripper letters and a known letter from Walter Sickert. Both were a match. Also, the watermarked paper on which both were written were proven to have come from the same stock, so it would be interesting to hear what people make of that?
I'm a newbie...so be nice
Scott
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Originally posted by DVV View PostEasy. He tasted half of it with a sauce Madère.
Indeed. He placed them by design. In fact, he was a modern-designer.
He picked her up in his royal coach, and PC Hutt was ennobled soon after, becoming Sir George.
The only flaw in your theory.
It was a Turkish madman.
Feel free to scratch your private part, my friend.
So, do remind us, "Who's the idiot?"Last edited by Vanillaman; 09-21-2014, 07:11 AM.
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Originally posted by sbanker31 View Post
Considering that almost all the Ripper letters(if not all,depending on who you ask) were hoaxes, I would say all it could prove is that Sickert could be guilty of writing a JtR hoax letter.
I'm a newbie...so be nice
Scott
This is exactly what happened.
Walter Sickert was drawn to the case of Jack The Ripper. As an artist with a fascination of the morbid and macabre. This case was like a flame to a moth for him. It is known he visited the crime scenes and often used the murders as inspiration for later works.
He would most likely fit the profile of what Hallie Rubenhold would imagine a modern Ripperologist to be. There was an unhealthy interest definitely.
It doesn’t mean he was Jack.Last edited by erobitha; 03-14-2021, 11:05 AM.
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